More detailed explanation of the Critical Reasoning/ Analysis category, which I thought students would have a more difficult time understanding what it included and what it excluded.
1. AMDG
Critical Reasoning
World History 1
The National Center for History in the Schools has compiled a list of key standards in
Historical Thinking1; for our purposes, we will refer to this collection by the broad
heading of Critical Reasoning. The types of thinking below constitute what others refer
to as “critical thinking,” but specifically for the Social Sciences.
When engaged in critical reading within the Social Sciences, students will utilize and be
required to demonstrate:
1. Chronological Thinking
2. Historical Comprehension
3. Historical Analysis and Interpretation
4. Historical Research Capabilities
5. Historical Issues-Analysis and Decision-Making
Each of these elements of historical thinking are further delineated according to the
National Standards on the following page.
1"Standards in Historical Thinking in Grades K-4." National Center for History in the Schools. UCLA,
2005. Web. 01 Jan. 2010. <http://nchs.ucla.edu/standards/thinking5-12.html>.
2. 1. Chronological Thinking
A. Distinguish between past, present, and future time.
B. Identify the temporal structure of a historical narrative or story.
C. Establish temporal order in constructing historical narratives of their own.
D. Measure and calculate calendar time.
E. Interpret data presented in time lines and create time lines.
F. Reconstruct patterns of historical succession and duration; explain historical continuity and
change.
G. Compare alternative models for periodization.
2. Historical Comprehension
A. Identify the author or source of the historical document or narrative and assess its credibility.
B. Reconstruct the literal meaning of a historical passage.
C. Identify the central question(s) the historical narrative addresses.
D. Differentiate between historical facts and historical interpretations.
E. Read historical narratives imaginatively.
F. Appreciate historical perspectives.
G. Draw upon data in historical maps.
H. Utilize visual, mathematical, and quantitative data.
3. Historical Analysis and Interpretation
A. Compare and contrast differing sets of ideas.
B. Consider multiple perspectives.
C. Analyze cause-and-effect relationships and multiple causation, including the importance of the
individual, the influence of ideas.
D. Draw comparisons across eras and regions in order to define enduring issues.
E. Distinguish between unsupported expressions of opinion and informed hypotheses grounded in
historical evidence.
F. Compare competing historical narratives.
G. Challenge arguments of historical inevitability.
H. Hold interpretations of history as tentative.
I. Evaluate major debates among historians.
J. Hypothesize the influence of the past.
4. Historical Research Capabilities
A. Formulate historical questions.
B. Obtain historical data from a variety of sources.
C. Interrogate historical data.
D. Identify the gaps in the available records, marshal contextual knowledge and perspectives of the
time and place.
E. Employ quantitative analysis.
F. Support interpretations with historical evidence.
5. Historical Issues-Analysis and Decision-Making
A. Identify issues and problems in the past.
B. Marshal evidence of antecedent circumstances.
C. Identify relevant historical antecedents.
D. Evaluate alternative courses of action.
E. Formulate a position or course of action on an issue.
F. Evaluate the implementation of a decision.